Postgraduate - Course2681 - Graduate Certificate of Pharmacoeconomics

Students who commenced study in 2012 should refer to this course entry for direction on the requirements; to check which units are currently available for enrolment, refer to the unit indexes in the the current edition of the Handbook. If you have any queries contact the managing faculty for your course.

Unit codes that are not linked to their entry in the handbook are not available for study in the current year.

This course is not available to international student visa holders.

Part-time study only

Description

This course is designed to provide an understanding of the economics of pharmaceuticals in health care systems, and the skills required to apply economic analysis to the evaluation of products and the broad policy issues affecting the industry.

Areas of study include cost-effectiveness analysis of a drug, economic modelling to support the inclusion or exclusion of a drug on a national or hospital formulary, design of a clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of drugs, and methods of evaluating health and non-health outcomes of drug use.

Outcomes

The Graduate Certificate in Pharmacoeconomics aims to produce graduates who will:

(a.) be critical and creative scholars who:

produce innovative solutions to health economics problems

apply research skills to health system challenges

communicate effectively and perceptively

(b.) be responsible and effective global citizens who:

engage in an internationalised world

exhibit cross-cultural competence

demonstrate ethical values

(c.) have a comprehensive understanding of their disciplines of economics and health economics and be able to provide discipline-based solutions relevant to the business, professional and public policy communities we serve

(d.) have advanced knowledge to Graduate Certificate level in health economics and be able to:

demonstrate analytical skills in economics in an examination of the role of economic and social influences on global drug development, research and development, and the structure of the pharmaceutical industry

apply techniques of economic evaluation in the evaluation of pharmaceuticals.

Progression to further studies

Students who successfully complete the Graduate Certificate in Pharmacoeconomics, may be eligible for admission to course 3807 Graduate Diploma in Health Economics and Policy subject to satisfying the appropriate entry requirements. For details visit http://www.monash.edu/study/coursefinder/3807/.